Title: Angry Ghosts Author: F. Allen Farnham Year: 2009 Publisher: Cadre One Publishing Reviewer: Susan Shepherd "Angry Ghosts" is set in the distant future, many generations after mankind has begun to travel between the stars, and a few hundred years after aliens came to Earth and wiped out the humans there. The surviving colonies, research stations and ships found themselves widely scattered and very much alone. Unable to contact one another due to fears that the aliens would intercept transmissions and hunt them down, most of these enclaves did what they could to become invisible. They hunkered down, tried to make do with the resources immediately available to them, and did what they could to not perish. It isn't known how many of these enclaves survived to the "present day" of the story. The novel follows a trio of soldiers, Thompson, Maiella, and Argo, from one such enclave. They are one of many teams whose job is to capture alien ships to get at the supplies and equipment inside, killing the alien crew and all passengers in the process. Naturally, this is a precarious situation---even one surviving alien could send a signal of some kind and doom the human settlement---so the trio has to be ready for anything and always prepared for sudden violence. From this premise, Farnham weaves an interesting story with plotlines whose focus ranges from the characters' personal issues to the fate of humankind. Since "Angry Ghosts" is the first book in a planned series, many of these plot-lines remain unresolved, but there is enough of a resolution that I at least felt satisfied with how the book ended. Unfortunately, the worldbuilding feels incomplete at best and inconsistent at worst. It is as though the author shifts the settlement's ethical system around to whatever is most convenient to the plot at that point in time. As a result, while the book is still enjoyable, several scenes which are meant to be full of tension come off as faintly annoying instead. As a side note, the book itself is very different from the back-cover blurb, which makes it sound as though the plot focuses on the aliens who attacked Earth. Since the book focuses strictly on human characters after Chapter Two or so, I found this rather odd. I'm guessing that later books will spend more time in the aliens' heads, but it is hard to know. Maybe the blurb writer was working from the first three chapters and a page-long summary of the rest; in any case, the blurb has practically nothing to do with the book's main plot. Overall, Angry Ghosts is readable. It explored some aspects of human culture that I hadn't seen before, and the dramatic buildup at the end was nice. But the world within the story was sufficiently inconsistent that I found myself arguing with the plot on several occasions. As a result, while I don't regret the time I invested in reading Angry Ghosts, I will not be seeking out its sequels.